Beginner Backpacking Trip Stories: The Real, Unfiltered Truth About Your First Overnight Trail

Beginner Backpacking Trip Stories: What I Learned the Hard Way
Beginner backpacker on mountain trail at sunrise — beginner backpacking trip stories
Beginner Backpacking · Trail Stories

Beginner Backpacking Trip Stories: The Real, Unfiltered Truth About Your First Overnight Trail

I overpacked by 17 pounds, earned blisters by mile four, and woke up to the most stunning sunrise of my life. Here’s everything I wish someone had told me first.

By Jamie Harlow June 2, 2025 9 min read · 2,200 words
Quick Answer Beginner backpacking trip stories share three honest lessons: your pack will be too heavy, your feet will hurt more than expected, and sleeping under stars makes every struggle worth it. Most first-timers succeed by starting with a 5–8 mile route, keeping their pack under 30 lbs, and choosing a well-marked trail with a simple campsite.
TL;DR I spent one disastrous, beautiful night on the Lost Coast Trail in Northern California. I overpacked by 12 lbs, got two blisters the size of quarters, and still woke up to the most stunning sunrise of my life. This post covers the whole story — plus eight lessons that would have saved me considerable pain.

How My First Beginner Backpacking Trip Story Actually Began

The smell hit me first — pine resin and cold air and something faintly oceanic. My knees were already complaining after two miles, my 47-lb pack was redistributing itself in ways no YouTube tutorial had warned me about, and I was very seriously reconsidering every life choice that had led me here.

That was my first beginner backpacking trip story. And it is, in the best possible way, one of the most important stories of my life.

I chose the Lost Coast Trail in Humboldt County, California — a 25-mile stretch of remote Pacific coastline with zero road access. I planned to hike just the first eight miles as an overnight. That decision was smart. Everything else I did was a masterclass in what not to do.

Hiker with large backpack on rugged mountain trail — common beginner backpacking challenge
Mile two. Pack weighing 47 lbs. Two blisters already forming. No regrets (yet).

Based on my personal experience in September 2023, I packed for every conceivable scenario: rain, hypothermia, bear attack, blisters, and apparently a weekend festival. My bag weighed 47 pounds. The recommended upper limit for my body weight was 30 pounds. Nobody had told me that number existed.

Within four miles, I had developed blisters on both heels — partly from new boots I hadn’t broken in, partly from steep gravel descents. I stopped at a creek, took off my shoes, and genuinely wondered whether I should turn back.

I didn’t. And that stubbornness turned out to be the best decision I’d ever made.

The trail will teach you things about yourself that a gym never could. Usually starting with: you packed way too much.

📎 INTERNAL LINK → “How to Choose Your First Backpacking Trail”

The Gear Mistakes I Made — and What to Pack Instead

This is the section most beginner backpacking guides skip, because it requires admitting failure. Here’s my full list of mistakes, mapped to what I’d actually recommend now.

What I Brought Weight What You Should Bring
Cotton jeans × 2 3.2 lbs 1 pair merino wool leggings
Cast iron skillet 4.8 lbs Titanium spork + freeze-dried meals
Brand-new leather boots 2.6 lbs Broken-in trail runners
5 paperback novels 2.1 lbs 1 Kindle (6 oz) or nothing
Full-size toiletry bag 1.4 lbs Travel-size essentials only
Lightweight beginner backpacking gear essentials laid out including tent sleeping bag and water filter
A proper beginner pack laid out — lightweight, functional, nothing extra. Every item earns its weight.

The cast iron pan story

I am not joking. I brought a cast iron skillet because I “wanted real food.” It weighed 4.8 pounds alone. A titanium spork costs $12. Freeze-dried meals from brands like Mountain House or Good To-Go weigh under 5 oz each and taste genuinely extraordinary after eight miles on trail. Your hunger is the best seasoning you’ll ever have.

Cotton destroys your comfort

Cotton absorbs sweat and stays wet against your skin for hours. In unexpected rain or cold morning air, wet cotton is a fast path to hypothermia. Replace every cotton layer with merino wool (Smartwool, Icebreaker) or moisture-wicking synthetics. Merino regulates temperature, resists odor, and dries in minutes.

What your total pack weight should be

According to REI’s backpacking guidelines, aim for a total pack weight of 20–25% of your body weight at maximum. For a 150-lb person, that’s 30–37 lbs — and lighter is always better. Most experienced backpackers aim for a base weight under 15 lbs before food and water.

📎 INTERNAL LINK → “Best Budget Backpacking Gear for Beginners 2025”

What Nobody Tells You About Your First Overnight Trail

Every first time backpacking experience guide covers gear lists. Very few cover what’s actually going on inside your head and body. Here’s what caught me completely off guard.

The silence is louder than you expect

If you’ve lived in a city, true wilderness quiet is genuinely disorienting. Your brain, accustomed to constant background noise, starts manufacturing threats. Every branch snap sounds like a bear. On my first night I lay awake until 2 a.m. convinced something was circling my tent. It was a squirrel. Give yourself two nights before your nervous system relaxes.

Your body doesn’t bounce back overnight

You will wake up stiffer than after any gym session you’ve ever done. Muscles with no names will announce themselves with great enthusiasm. Bring ibuprofen. Stretch before you break camp. Walk the first half-mile at a slow, deliberate pace. By noon you’ll feel human again — and often better than at home.

There’s a threshold — most people quit right before it

Around 45–60 minutes into hiking, your body stops protesting and shifts into a sustainable rhythm. First-time backpackers often quit just before reaching that threshold because the first hour feels impossible. If you’re miserable during the first hour, give yourself 30 more minutes before making any decisions about turning back.

Hiker resting on forest trail during first overnight backpacking experience learning from the journey
Mile six. Boots off. Questioning everything. Still going. — This is the moment that separates who finishes from who doesn’t.
📎 INTERNAL LINK → “Leave No Trace Principles: A Complete Beginner’s Guide”

The Moment That Made Every Blister Worth It

I woke at 5:47 a.m. to the sound of waves.

My tent was pitched forty feet from the Pacific Ocean. The fog was still thick, the light the color of old silver. I unzipped my sleeping bag, pulled on my merino layer, and walked barefoot to the edge of the bluff.

At 6:04 a.m., the sun broke through the fog bank over the water. For ninety seconds, everything turned pink and gold and completely silent except for the ocean below.

I stood there with two bandaged heels, a back that ached from a borrowed sleeping pad, and the clearest mind I’d had in years. I thought: I am going to do this again, and again, and again.

Stunning mountain sunrise from backpacking campsite — the reward of completing a beginner overnight trail
6:04 a.m. — Every single blister was worth exactly this moment.

That is what beginner backpacking trip stories are really about. Not the gear. Not the miles. The moment you earn with your feet that you couldn’t buy with anything else.

8 Practical Tips Every Beginner Backpacker Needs Before Going

These are the condensed lessons from my overnight backpacking for beginners experience — and from dozens of other first-timers I’ve spoken with since.

  • 1 Start with 5–8 miles total for your first overnight. Resist the urge to make your first trip epic. The wilderness will still be there for longer adventures once you’ve built your base fitness and confidence.
  • 2 Break in your footwear for at least 50 miles before the trip. Wear your trail shoes everywhere — errands, the gym, the grocery store. New footwear on day one is a guaranteed blister factory.
  • 3 Pack your bag, weigh it, then remove 20% of what’s inside. You will not miss a single removed item. You will be intensely grateful for every ounce you left behind by mile six.
  • 4 Tell someone your exact route and expected return time. Use AllTrails to share your itinerary digitally. If something goes wrong, someone needs to know exactly where you went.
  • 5 Carry a water filter — always. The Sawyer Squeeze costs around $35 and weighs 3 oz. Never rely on finding clean water without a reliable way to treat it.
  • 6 Practice setting up your tent at home before you leave. Fumbling with unfamiliar poles in the dark after a 10-mile day is demoralizing and wastes your last hour of good daylight.
  • 7 Follow Leave No Trace principles. Pack out all waste, camp at established sites, stay on marked trails. You’re a guest in the ecosystem. According to LNT.org, these principles protect trails for all future hikers.
  • 8 Bring moleskin blister pads, not regular bandaids. Cut a donut shape around any hot spot before it becomes a full blister. You will understand why by mile four. This single item saved my second trip entirely.
📎 INTERNAL LINK → “5 Perfect Overnight Trails for First-Time Backpackers”

Frequently Asked Questions

How far should a beginner hike on their first backpacking trip?
Most beginners do best with 5–8 miles total for a one-night trip. This gives you enough time to set up camp before dark, enjoy the experience without being destroyed, and still have energy for the return hike. Save the 15-mile days for after you’ve built endurance over a few trips.
What should I not bring on a beginner backpacking trip?
Avoid cotton clothing, heavy boots you haven’t broken in, full-size toiletries, and anything you’re packing “just in case.” Camp chairs, multiple clothing changes, and heavy cooking equipment are the most common weight traps for beginners. If you’re unsure whether to bring something, leave it behind.
Is it safe to go backpacking alone as a beginner?
Solo backpacking carries real risk for first-timers. Consider starting with at least one trail partner. If you go solo, choose a popular trail with cell coverage, file a trip plan with someone at home, and consider a satellite communicator like the Garmin inReach Mini for remote areas.
How much does a first backpacking trip cost?
Quality starter gear runs $400–$700 and will last years with proper care. Backcountry permits in national parks cost $5–$20 per night. Freeze-dried meals run $8–$15 per day. Once you own the gear, individual trips are very affordable — often under $50 for food and permits combined.
What is the hardest part of your first backpacking trip?
Most first-timers say the mental challenge — not the physical one — is hardest. The discomfort, unfamiliar night sounds, and accumulated exhaustion compound intensely on day one. The second hardest part is resisting the urge to overpack. Once you’ve cleared both hurdles, most people are immediately planning their next trip.
Do I need special training before my first backpacking trip?
No formal training is required. Walking 3–5 miles several times a week for a month beforehand, combined with wearing your loaded pack on shorter day hikes, is enough preparation for a beginner overnight trip of 5–8 miles. Cardiovascular fitness helps; a gym-only routine does not prepare your feet.
What is the best time of year for a first backpacking trip?
Late spring through early fall — May through October — is ideal for most beginner-friendly trails in the US. Avoid planning your first trip during snowpack season or monsoon periods. Always check current trail conditions on AllTrails or the relevant park’s official website before you go.

Your First Trail Is Waiting

My first beginner backpacking trip story didn’t go according to plan. My feet hurt, my back hurt, and my ego took a serious blow somewhere around mile three when I started regretting the cast iron pan.

None of that mattered at 6:04 a.m. when the fog broke over the Pacific Ocean and everything turned gold.

Start small. Pack light. Go before you feel ready — because you will never feel completely ready, and the trail doesn’t care. It will meet you wherever you are and show you something you couldn’t have found any other way.

Share your own first trail story in the comments below. I read every one of them, and they are consistently the best part of running this site.

Read more beginner trail stories →
JH
Jamie Harlow — Trail Writer & Beginner Backpacking Coach

I’ve completed 40+ overnight backpacking trips across the US West Coast since a disastrous-but-wonderful first attempt in September 2023. I write for hikers who are nervous, overpacked, and completely ready to go anyway. → Read my full story

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top